|
Well, at least I know how to strike a nerve. A couple of years
ago, I delivered a major address on marriage to the 2004 New Attitude Conference organized by
Joshua Harris, author of influential books like I Kissed Dating
Goodbye and Not Even a Hint. Those attending the
conference seemed to receive the message with great
appreciation, but a rather significant reaction has come from
those who take issue with what I had to say.
Speaking on "The Mystery of Marriage," I tried to address
the modern crisis of marriage from a biblical point of view. With
marriage in eclipse — both in the culture and in some
sectors of the church — I sounded an alarm directed
specifically at young single adults who, by their very attendance
at this conference, already showed that they shared this
concern. With background issues including controversy over
same-sex marriage, rampant divorce, and demographic trends
indicating significant dangers for the institution of marriage, I
went back to the basics.
Drawing from the creation account and other significant
biblical passages, I sought to demonstrate that the Bible
presents a conception of marriage that goes far beyond what
most persons have even imagined. According to the Bible,
marriage is not primarily about our self-esteem and personal
fulfillment, nor is it just one lifestyle option among others. The
Bible is clear in presenting a picture of marriage that is rooted in
the glory of God made evident in creation itself. The man and
the woman are made for each other and the institution of
marriage is given to humanity as both opportunity and
obligation.
From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible assumes that
marriage is normative for human beings. The responsibilities,
duties, and joys of marriage are presented as matters of spiritual
significance. From a Christian perspective, marriage must never
be seen as a mere human invention — an option for those
who choose such a high level of commitment — for it is
an arena in which God's glory is displayed in the right ordering
of the man and the woman, and their glad reception of all that
marriage means, gives, and requires.
The Marginalization of Marriage
Clearly, something has gone badly wrong in our
understanding of marriage. This is not only reflected in much of
the conversation and literature about marriage found in the
secular world, but in many Christian circles as well. The
undermining of marriage — or at least its reduction to
something less than the biblical concept — is also evident
in the way many Christians marry, and in the way others fail to
marry.
In the larger culture of confusion, marriage is seen by some
persons as an option for those who "need" it. Radical feminists
have attacked marriage as a hopelessly patriarchal institution,
binding women to home and family in what Betty Friedan called
"domestic captivity." A revolution in the law has made divorce
easy and quick, undermining the marital bond and redefining
marriage as a tentative commitment.
Some of these who desire marriage are driven by the wrong
desires. Some are looking for social benefits as others see
marriage as a form of self-expression. By any measure, marriage
is in trouble.
All this cries out for biblical correction, and Christians must
resist the accommodationist temptation to accept the
marginalization of marriage.
This generation of young Christians must lead the way in
the recovery of the biblical vision, and build a Christian
counter-culture that puts marriage back at the center of human
life and Christian living. The young people who attended the
New Attitude Conference represent a great hope for such a
recovery. The heart-felt yearning for marriage so movingly
communicated by those who have sent me such pointed
responses to my message indicates that these young Christians
are also committed to be agents of such a Christian
recovery.
The Gift of Celibacy
There is one significant qualification about marriage found
in the Scriptures. In 1 Corinthians chapter seven, the Apostle
Paul writes specifically about the gift of celibacy, offering a clear
teaching for those who are given this special gift in order to be
liberated for strategic Gospel service. Paul's point is clear. The
obligations that are part and parcel of marriage are a matter of
deep spiritual responsibility. A Christian who is married is, under
the obligations of that sacred institution, less free to seize some
opportunities for ministry that would be open to one who is
unmarried.
Paul celebrates the gift of celibacy for Christian service, but
he says nothing about those who simply would choose
singleness as a lifestyle option. His concern was to see the
Gospel preached throughout the world, even as the moral
reputation of the Corinthian congregation was restored on
matters of marriage and sexuality.
Furthermore, Paul speaks very specifically about the sexual
aspect of marriage and instructs, "it is better to marry than to
burn with passion" (1 Cor. 7:9, NASB). I appreciate Paul's
apostolic candor. He did not condemn sexual desire and sexual
passion, but he directed the Corinthians — and us
— to marriage as the proper arena for such passion to be
expressed.
With all this in view, it would seem that the Bible offers two
specific teachings about marriage that should frame our
understanding and our engagement in the current debate.
First, marriage is presented as a sacred institution, a
covenant made between the man and the woman before their
Creator, and an arena in which the glory of God is demonstrated
to the watching world through the goodness of the marital
relationship, the one-flesh character of the marital bond, the
holiness of marital sex, and the completeness that comes with
the gift of children.
Second, the Bible presents celibacy as a gift —
apparently a rare gift — that is granted to some believers
in order that they would be liberated for special service in
Christ's name. Paul's discussion of celibacy indicates that this
gift is marked by the absence of lust and sexual desire that
would compromise or complicate ministry as an unmarried
person. Accordingly, those who have been given the gift of
celibacy find in Christ the satisfactions others are given through
marriage.
Paul privileges this gift of celibacy, stating that he would
have many of the Corinthians demonstrate this gift and "remain
even as I" (1
Cor. 7:8). Yet, most Christians in every age have been
married — not celibate. Marriage has represented the
norm for adult Christians in every generation since the time of
Paul's writing. This is consistent with the purposes of marriage
as laid out in the biblical pattern, and is acknowledged by Paul in
numerous passages dealing with husbands and wives, parents
and children, and qualifications for church leaders. Celibacy is a
wonderful gift — a gift the whole church should celebrate
— but it is a rare gift.
The Problem of Extended Adolescence
Now, to the hard part. Demographic trends, cultural shifts,
and a weakening of the biblical concept of marriage have
produced a situation in which marriage is in big trouble, even
among many Christians. Divorce must be listed first among the
ills that have befallen marriage in recent decades, but at the New
Attitude Conference I was asked to address young singles who
had not yet married. While the problem of divorce must always
be acknowledged and confronted with biblical truth, in speaking
to never-married single Christians my purpose was to point
them to the glory of God in the comprehensive goodness of
marriage. Speaking to that audience, I addressed a problem
much closer at hand.
By any calculation, the statistics indicate that young adults
are marrying much later in life than at any time in recent human
history. As a matter of fact, demographers have suggested that
this new pattern of delay in marriage has established a statistical
pattern that in previous generations had been most closely
associated with social crises like war and natural disaster.
Here are the plain facts: According to the 2000 U.S. Census,
the first marriage for the average male is now at age 27. For
white females, the age is slightly lower. This amounts to a delay
that often has devastating consequences. With puberty coming
at earlier ages than ever before — certainly in the early
teens for most Americans — the period of time between
sexual maturity and marriage is now stretching out into
something like an average of 10 to 15 years. The accompanying
statistics related to premarital sexual activity parallel the
statistics related to the delay of marriage. Can anyone be
surprised?
Other problems are closely associated with this delay of
marriage. Speaking to this group of Christian young people
— an outstanding group of young Christian disciples and
leaders — I pointed to what sociologists now describe as
"extended adolescence" — a period of life that now is
extended well into the 20s and even early 30s by many young
adults, often young men, who have trouble making the
transition to adulthood.
I urged these young Christians to seize the biblical concept
of marriage and all of its glory, to understand that God has set
this covenant before them as expectation, and to channel their
energies toward getting married, staying married, and showing
God's glory in those marriages.
I shared with those who attended the conference my
concern that this delay — the deliberate putting off of
marriage even among some who intend some day to be married
— was "the sin I think besets this generation." Continuing,
I also made clear that this is primarily a problem that should be
laid at the feet of young men. While some young women may
neglect the call of marriage, a far greater problem is the
unwillingness of many young men to grow up, take
responsibility, lead, and find the woman God would have them
to marry. As a rule, young women show far greater commitment
to marriage, far greater maturity about marriage, and far greater
frustration about the fact that marriage has been delayed. I
thought I had made that point clearly — but perhaps
not.
Is Singleness a Sin?
Those who attended the 2004 New Attitude Conference
responded to my message on "The Mystery of Marriage" with a
great deal of appreciation and receptivity. I was quickly
surrounded by young men who had felt a brotherly kick to the
seat of their pants, and by many young women who appreciated
the fact that I had articulated what many of them had hoped to
hear.
Nevertheless, the delayed reaction among some who did not
attend the conference has been to the contrary. Weeks after I
addressed the conference, much of the message was broadcast
on FamilyLife Today, a national
radio broadcast hosted by Dennis Rainey and Bob Lepine.
FamilyLife Today is an outstanding program, and I was very
pleased that my message had been broadcast. It seems that
others were less than enthusiastic.
Within weeks of that broadcast, a major critique of the
message was offered by Camerin Courtney and posted at
ChristianityToday.com. In her article, entitled "Is Singleness a Sin?," Ms. Courtney
decided to respectfully let me have it. She suggested that I had
offered "gross overgeneralizations" about single people, and she
argued that most Christian singles "aren't delaying marriage due
to selfish motives." Ms. Courtney went on to say that most
singles she knows "earnestly desire to be married, are surprised
and/or frustrated that they aren't yet, and are prayerfully trying
to figure out how to get from here to there."
Most specifically, Ms. Courtney was offended by my
suggestion that, except for those given the gift of celibacy,
marriage is the God-given context for the achievement of
maturity in adulthood. Many others have responded to that
argument as well.
In the days following Ms. Courtney's article, I received a
flood of e-mail messages and other contacts. Most have been
very clear about their outrage, but also very thoughtful in
suggesting exactly where they felt I had gone wrong.
Interestingly, every single response to Ms. Courtney's article I
have yet received has been written by a woman.
In reflecting on these messages and the points these very
articulate and thoughtful women have raised, I am led to wonder
if parts of the total message may have been edited or missing
from the version they read or heard. But even if all the
arguments were present, I wonder if some of them may have
been missed or minimized.
In any event, the ensuing controversy affords all of us a
good opportunity to look again at the biblical teachings
concerning marriage and commit ourselves to accountability
before God for the totality of our lives. Some of my respondents
clearly missed the point concerning celibacy. But others still
want to argue that intentional singleness — apparently
without respect to celibacy — can be an acceptable
lifestyle option for believers.
No, Singleness is Not a Sin
I stand unmoved, even more convinced that the argument I
made at the New Attitude Conference is precisely correct.
Singleness is not a sin, but deliberate singleness on the part
of those who know they have not been given the gift of celibacy
is, at best, a neglect of a Christian responsibility. The problem
may be simple sloth, personal immaturity, a fear of
commitment, or an unbalanced priority given to work and
profession. On the part of men, it may also take the shape of a
refusal to grow up and take the lead in courtship. There are
countless Christian women who are prayerfully waiting for
Christian men to grow up and take the lead. What are these guys
waiting for?
The delay of marriage has caused any number of ills in the
larger society, and in the church. Honesty compels us to admit
that this is indeed tied to levels of sexual promiscuity and
frustration, even as it means that many persons are now
marrying well into their adult years, missing the opportunity of
growing together as a young couple, and putting parenthood
potentially at risk.
Almost all of the women who have written me in response
to this article have indicated their grief and frustration that they
are not yet married. Not one has indicated in her message that
she has intended from the beginning to be single and to remain
single. To the contrary, each writer has affirmed her own
commitment to marriage and to be married, and each has
spoken of her personal frustration that her hopes have not been
yet fulfilled.
Given this commitment and hope as articulated by these
thoughtful young women, it should be clear that when I spoke of
a pattern of sin in the delay of marriage, I was certainly not
attributing that sin to them. To the contrary, as one who
believes wholeheartedly in the biblical pattern of
complementarity and in the male responsibility to lead, I charge
young men with far greater responsibility for this failure. The
extension of a "boy culture" into the 20s and 30s, along with a
sense of uncertainty about the true nature of male leadership,
has led many young men to focus on career, friends, sports, and
any number of other satisfactions when they should be
preparing themselves for marriage and taking responsibility to
grow up, be the man, and show God's glory as husband and
father.
Recovering A Biblical Vision of Marriage
I am not calling for high school students to marry, and I am
certainly not suggesting that believers of any age should marry
thoughtlessly, carelessly, and without sound spiritual judgment.
But I am most emphatically arguing that this delay of marriage
now presents the church with a critical test: We will either
recover a full and comprehensive biblical vision of marriage in
all of its glory, or we will soon find believers so accommodated
to the culture around us that all we seek in our marriages is to
do marginally better than what we see in the world.
Sensitivity demands that we understand the grief,
frustration, and concern of Christian young adults struggling
with this issue. They are the inheritors of a culture that has
minimized marriage and has sent mixed messages concerning
sex, gender, marriage, and all the rest. The full biblical vision of
marriage was not, in the main, held before them from their
earliest years at home, and was not encouraged and enriched as
they grew through adolescence into adulthood. Many of them
— especially many young women — feel victimized
by this pattern, and they are frustrated by the reality.
Now is the time for the church to take this conversation to
the next level. This generation of Christian young adults has the
opportunity to seize the moment, reverse cultural trends, and
show their elders the glory of marriage as God intended it from
the beginning.
I stand by my argument — renewed in this conviction
even by the controversy that has followed. At the same time, I'm
going to be a good bit more careful to make clear that young
men must accept most of the blame for this situation. I will also
remind these young men that, armed with a biblical mandate
and fueled by Christian passion, they can also be the vanguard
for recovery.
Let's keep this conversation going, and encourage each
other to pursue God's glory in every dimension of our lives
— and to settle for nothing less.
|